4.6 Article

Isoform-Specific Role of GSK-3 in High Fat Diet Induced Obesity and Glucose Intolerance

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11030559

Keywords

GSK-3; high-fat diet; glucose tolerance; obesity

Categories

Funding

  1. NHLBI [R01HL133290, R01HL143074]
  2. Training Grant in Cardiovascular Research from NHLBI [T32 HL007411)]
  3. American Heart Fellowship (AHA) postdoctoral Fellowship [19POST34460025]
  4. [T32 HL007411]

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Obesity-associated metabolic disorders are increasing globally, and there is a need to understand the molecular mechanisms behind them. The study finds that GSK-3 plays a significant role in metabolic diseases, particularly in patients with Type 2 diabetes. Using novel mouse models, the researchers discover that GSK-3 has isoform-specific effects on obesity and glucose tolerance, highlighting the importance of these findings for clinical applications.
Obesity-associated metabolic disorders are rising to pandemic proportions; hence, there is an urgent need to identify underlying molecular mechanisms. Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) signaling is highly implicated in metabolic diseases. Furthermore, GSK-3 expression and activity are increased in Type 2 diabetes patients. However, the isoform-specific role of GSK-3 in obesity and glucose intolerance is unclear. Pharmacological GSK-3 inhibitors are not isoform-specific, and tissue-specific genetic models are of limited value to predict the clinical outcome of systemic inhibiion. To overcome these limitations, we created novel mouse models of ROSA26CreERT2-driven, tamoxifen-inducible conditional deletion of GSK-3 that allowed us to delete the gene globally in an isoform-specific and temporal manner. Isoform-specific GSK-3 KOs and littermate controls were subjected to a 16-week high-fat diet (HFD) protocol. On an HFD, GSK-3 alpha KO mice had a significantly lower body weight and modest improvement in glucose tolerance compared to their littermate controls. In contrast, GSK-3 beta-deletion-mediated improved glucose tolerance was evident much earlier in the timeline and extended up to 12 weeks post-HFD. However, this protective effect weakened after chronic HFD (16 weeks) when GSK-3 beta KO mice had a significantly higher body weight compared to controls. Importantly, GSK-3 beta KO mice on a control diet maintained significant improvement in glucose tolerance even after 16 weeks. In summary, our novel mouse models allowed us to delineate the isoform-specific role of GSK-3 in obesity and glucose tolerance. From a translational perspective, our findings underscore the importance of maintaining a healthy weight in patients receiving lithium therapy, which is thought to work by GSK-3 inhibition mechanisms.

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